At the time the paper cost just 5 cents. We found articles about the storm causing problems for traffic, but the traffic in question was Ohio River traffic.

The paper even looked back at history too. The snow on Nov. 17, 1920 came on the heels of snow on the 16th too. It dumped more than 5 inches on the ground. And that snow fall didn’t break records – it set records. That’s because one article said the records only went back 36 years at that point.

Running to the store to stock up for a storm is not a new phenomenon. The Kroger advertisement listed prices for essentials like eggs and coffee. They would have cost you just 59 cents and 22 cents back in 1920.

Sharing weather photos on the news is nothing new either.

Photographers for the paper went out and snapped shots of the gazebo in Eden Park.

The article urged readers to clip the photos and “share ‘em with your grandchildren.”